No Solution in Sight for Afghan Troops Killing NATO Forces

NATO commanders are struggling to contain the damage from a spike in “fratricidal” attacks by Afghan forces, seeking to protect their troops without rupturing a frayed partnership with Kabul.

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With Afghan soldiers opening fire on their NATO comrades with alarming frequency, US defense officials on Thursday confirmed that NATO troops had been ordered to adopt strict new security precautions to counter the insidious threat.

The stepped up security underlines the dilemma facing the American-led force that has portrayed its alliance with Afghan troops as a cornerstone of the war effort.

With 17 coalition troops killed in insider attacks so far this year, US officers acknowledge the so-called green-on-blue attacks require weighing security concerns with the need to cultivate ties with Afghan security forces.

Reflecting a growing threat, the commander of NATO and US troops, General John Allen, issued orders in recent weeks calling for some advisers to carry weapons and for NATO units to designate one team member as a “guardian angel,” who remains armed and on alert for possible fratricidal attacks, officials said.

For coalition troops working at Afghan government or military buildings, the orders require them to move desks to make sure their backs are not turned to the door.

After two US advisers were gunned down last month inside the Afghan interior ministry, NATO officers were withdrawn from government ministries.

Most of the advisers have yet to return to the ministry buildings and now carry out their work by email and phone.

But Kirby and other officers insist the NATO partnership with Afghans is not in jeopardy and that commanders are determined for coalition troops to stay engaged with their counterparts.

Afghan officials are taking steps to improve physical security at government offices and to vet possible infiltrators or recruits prone to extremism, Allen said in Washington this week.

The Pentagon has offered varying explanations of the insider attacks, describing them as “isolated” events, a natural part of counter-insurgency warfare and the result of “self-radicalized” Afghans as well as Taliban infiltration.

An internal Pentagon report by an academic last year called the problem “systemic” and blamed much of the violence on a deep cultural divide between the two sides.

Two British soldiers were shot on Monday in Lashkar Gah in Helmand province by an Afghan army officer who had no known ties to the Taliban and five years of experience.

He was sent to the Lashkar Gah base to collect a commander, “but apparently the NATO soldiers did not open the gate for them, he got angry and shot them,” said General Sayed Maluk of the Afghan army’s 215 corps.

Allen said US forces had faced similar fratricidal threats in Iraq and Vietnam, but some analysts disagree.

More than a hundred years ago, British troops in Afghanistan faced mutinies or were shot by their nominal allies in tribal militias, he said.

During his time in Helmand province working with US Marines, Malkasian said scuffles between the two sides were common, with Afghans sensitive to perceived insults to their honor.

Malkasian said he believed coalition forces would manage to keep the problem under control but some former officers warned the political fallout could be far worse, particularly in the United States where public support for the war has plunged.

Americans are ready to accept that troops will be killed fighting Taliban insurgents, he said, but “they’re not at all supportive of having those casualties come from the people that we’re working with.”